Trailers & Videos

Floodlights | Trailer - BBC

Floodlights Q&A with the cast and creatives
Cast

Gerard Kearns
Andrew Woodward

Jonas Armstrong
Barry Bennell

Morven Christie
Jean Woodward

Steve Edge
Terry Woodward

Neil Bell
DS Haleford

Antony Byrne
Neil Warnock

Avin Shah
Ash Stephenson

Mark Holgate
DC Blakefield

Jessica Baglow
DC Grace

Lauren O'Rourke
DI Arrowcroft

Matthew Hawksley
DS Denmyre

Sean Croke
Danny Taylor

David Loy
Physio
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
This is quite an harrowing story about how a real-life football coach - portrayed well here by Jonas Armstrong - managed to dupe just about everyone for years that he was a reputable and upstanding individual whilst at the same time, was routinely abusing the trust of those around him to prey on the younger boys who thought he offered them a path to escape the drudgery of their day-to-day lives. On the face of it, it is quite astonishing that he got away with it for so long; but this man was clever. Bennell played upon the aspirations of parents and children alike. Not just their desires for fame and success, but for more ordinary things like inclusion, affection, being part of a team. This story focusses on the young Andy Woodward, whom Bennell cleverly manoeuvred into his bed with promises that a successful career could stop his mum from having to work in the local chip shop. There is nothing graphic here - and that makes the efforts more potent. His manipulation was psychological and he even comes out with the immortal line "you didn't say no!" which though possibly true, is anything but the point. No amount of rules and regulation can ever prevent clever people like this from prevailing simply because it is the honest trust and integrity that exists in most of us that allows people that perpetrate this predatory behaviour to thrive. If we can't see any flaws, then we don't know to look for them - and these young lads were the unwilling victims not of indifference, but of cleverness and shame! The drama is measured, the dialogue poignant and the performances convincing - especially towards the end. This is well worth a watch.
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